ChatterBank2 mins ago
Queen Victoria's funeral
Many years ago, I read that an army regiment dropped Queen Victoria's coffin. For their sin, they were banished by never again having a home posting (the regiment of course, not individual soldiers). I have never been able to substantiate the story. Is there any truth in it, and if so which regiment?
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by Grunty. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.During Queen Victoria's funeral, the Royal Horse Artillery experienced problems manouevring on an icy slope and a trace snapped, injuring one of the horses pulling the gun carriage. As the RHA prepared to replace the damaged trace, sailors stepped forward and began to haul the gun carriage by hand and a tradition was born.
No blame was attached to the RHA because the equipment failure was deemed to have been a manufacturing fault.
Like Drusilla I am not aware of any story about the funeral other than the problem with the gun carriage.
Click here to view a transcript of a letter written to the Times newspaper regarding an article that had been written in later years about the incident (scroll to the bottom of the page). Looking at the wording of it it may be that they story you read was perhaps a misinterpretation of events. Certainly, the author of the letter states
...King Edward told me that no blame for the contretemps attached to the Royal Horse Artillery by reason of the faulty material that had been supplied to them...
..... and here she is ...........